NutriNews Spring 2016 Issue | Page 34

Faculty Interview By: Anne Fard D r. Jonathon Maguire is currently working as a clinical epidemiologist at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital, and is a practicing pediatrician at St. Michael’s Hospital and the Hospital for Sick Children. He is an assistant professor of Pediatrics at the University of Toronto. His core research interest includes clinical trials involving nutrition and development in young children as well as the creation of tools to improve child health practice. With Dr. Catherine Birken, he co-leads the largest practicebased research network for children in Canada called TARGet Kids! Dr. Maguire kindly agreed to be interviewed for this edition of NutriNews. I understand that you got your MD at U of T, and completed your residency at SickKids. Briefly, please share what was your one greatest learning from your experience? It is important to plan your career and it helps to do so as early as possible. Education takes a long time and when you finish it is important to end up where you want to be. People ask me how you get from here to there, but a better question is where is ‘there’ for you? How did you know that you wanted to be a doctor and a researcher? I have been passionate about children for a long time and that guided my thinking. Children are incredibly important in our society and it is important to know how to make them as happy and healthy and wise as possible so that our country can be that too. Early on I felt as though not many people seemed to appreciate this, and so I wanted to change that. Fortunately, I had fantastic people around me who pointed me in the right direction. One of the key ingredients for success for a young investigator is having successful mentors. Mentors know how to maximally apply your skills to achieve what you want. These are difficult things to manage on your own. Photo from: http://ihpme.utoronto.ca/faculty/jonathon-maguire/ and Alberto Seveso Q A SPRING 2016 | From Prescription to Nutrition | 32